NoOnes – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Tue, 02 Jul 2024 08:54:53 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png NoOnes – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 The Fall of SBF is a Lesson Crypto Needs | by Ray Youssef https://techeconomy.ng/the-fall-of-sbf-is-a-lesson-crypto-needs-by-ray-youssef/ https://techeconomy.ng/the-fall-of-sbf-is-a-lesson-crypto-needs-by-ray-youssef/#respond Tue, 02 Jul 2024 08:54:53 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=135502 When Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison, the crypto world took notice, but I wonder how many people really thought about where he went wrong.

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Nigeria ranks top most cryptocurrency ownership
Cryptocurrencies (credit: Nuthawut-adobe)

Sure, he was convicted of fraud and conspiracy, but high-profile people from every industry have stolen money and pulled-down the house of cards around them.

I would have stopped thinking about SBF by now if he hadn’t been in crypto – but he was, so I can’t stay silent.

His failure was a failure of values because he misunderstood the reason why Bitcoin and most of crypto exists. If too many of us in crypto make the same mistakes, all of us are in trouble.

When the motivation for people running a crypto business becomes only about making themselves money, I have a problem.

I have a problem because even the governments printing money understand it would be a pointless exercise to just store it all until its value increases.

Fiat has to have some utility, otherwise it’s just paper. Many in crypto despise fiat currency, yet they talk about crypto as if it’s almost the same thing. They treat it only as an investment and forget its utility.

When I first understood the real power of Bitcoin, I knew that making myself successful was only the tip of a very big iceberg.

In my early days building a crypto company, I was offered a lot of money to sell it. I could have taken the money and lived a luxurious life, but I chose not to. I’ve always believed that crypto has the potential to change the world for the better, and I wanted to be a part of that.

I was born in Egypt , but I grew up in a nasty part of New York City called Hell’s Kitchen. It’s a different place now, but in the 80s and 90s it was pretty scary.

When I was a kid helping my parents run a newsstand in Hell’s Kitchen, times were tough, and we weren’t just battling to put food on the table. We were fighting to survive.

I saw a lot of people struggling, a lot of antisocial behaviour, and I now realize that many of the problems were caused by people having to fight tooth-and-nail to get a piece of the action.

Some wanted money for drugs, but many just wanted to pay the rent or put food on the table. It wasn’t a nice place to visit, let alone to live, work, and go to school.

My experiences in the Global South paralleled those early years in Hell’s Kitchen, and they taught me that we have to give people a place at the table. We have to give them some food, and that’s one of our values at NoOnes – “everyone eats.”

Part of our strategy is to give back 50% of our profits to the people, and we have already started to do it.

Our initiatives like cashbacks, including paying $50 to students learning how to buy Bitcoin and payouts to traders using our partner program, are already having an impact. “Everyone eats” is key because my success won’t be complete until those around me thrive, too.

SBF talked about “effective altruism” and said he donated money to the “Future Fund,” but I’m not aware of anything he built. He signed the “Giving Pledge” a few years ago, but the value of that is now exactly zero. Unlike effective altruism, I decided a long time ago that giving back had to be part of my business model. I wasn’t going to make a lot of money and then decide where to donate it.

While at Paxful, I created Built with Bitcoin and helped build 13 schools and other infrastructure in the Global South. Now, I’m taking it to the next level with NoOnes nation and the ecosystem we are building.

Some people might think I’m wasting my time and money, but it’s a business decision as much as it is an ethical one.

Satoshi thought of Bitcoin as a universal container for money that could be part of a new financial architecture. It was never meant to be just another form of investment.

Originally, when I built Paxful, it was in response to my “bullish education” – another of my core values. This belief fueled my conviction that Bitcoin and peer-to-peer technology were part of the solution to the problems with the traditional financial system.

But after witnessing the challenges faced by communities on the ground, particularly in Africa, I came to understand that these tools alone weren’t enough. We needed more than that.

In the U.S., I tried to find solutions for the problems in the Global South, but I realized I had to leave if I wanted to build what was needed. I resigned from my role  and did the only thing I could do – I went home to the Global South and built the right “nation” here. That nation is NoOnes, and one of the keys to it succeeding is another core value – “revolutionary transparency.”

Revolutionary transparency, in essence, is flipping information availability on its head. I knew what I had to do when I created NoOnes because I listened to the savvy, African bitcoiners telling me their problems, and then I used that information to improve our product.

Every day we take their feedback and make our peer-to-peer marketplace better. But it won’t work if the people on the ground don’t know what’s going on – and that’s why transparency is crucial.

The transparency they talk about in the West is not revolutionary. What I’m talking about is being completely open, and that means, for example, showing anyone – not just our employees or the users of our marketplace – the CEO dashboard. Anyone can click on the link and see what I see right now. Imagine if we could see what SBF was seeing a year before the collapse of FTX?

If we are going to build a real financial ecosystem that is fair to everyone, regardless of where they were born or what passports they have, we must have the trust of the people we are building it for.

We can only gain that trust if we are completely transparent, and that’s a revolutionary idea because the people in crypto like Sam Bankman-Fried, who talk about transparency but never follow-through, hurt all of us.

The people who know me will recognize my values because I’ve been talking about them and acting upon them for years.

Apart from Built with Bitcoin and all the schools, water wells, and education centers I helped build, I co-authored the white paper for a censorship-resistant, global, peer-to-peer marketplace blueprint called CivKit. It’s open source because we need others to build their own NoOnes to help us create this new financial ecosystem that uses Bitcoin and peer-to-peer to set our money free from the prisons in the Global South that keep it locked away.

We need competitors building their own ecosystems on CivKit, or joining our NoOnes community to advocate for financial freedom in the Global South.

We need people with the right values who are willing to learn the truth about the fight we are up against and how we can build a better future for everyone.

If we want to make Bitcoin or any crypto work as it was intended, everyone has to eat, they have to be educated, and they have to trust us. We need more NoOnes nations and less FTXes if we are going to see this project through to the end.

NoOnes appoints Ray Youssef
*The writer; Ray Youssef is the CEO of P2P Bitcoin marketplace NoOnes, discusses values
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NoOnes CEO Ray Youssef Backs IMF on Crypto Regulation in Nigeria https://techeconomy.ng/noones-ceo-ray-youssef-backs-imf-on-crypto-regulation-in-nigeria/ https://techeconomy.ng/noones-ceo-ray-youssef-backs-imf-on-crypto-regulation-in-nigeria/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2024 11:30:41 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=133118 Ray Youssef, CEO of NoOnes, a crypto marketplace, believes that the recent calls from The International Monetary Fund (IMF) for Nigeria to license global cryptocurrency exchanges, is a step the West African country should follow.

Techeconomy had reported about The IMF’s recommendation that global cryptocurrency trading platforms should be registered or licensed in Nigeria and subject to regulatory requirements. 

The Body made this recommendation, in the recent staff country report for Nigeria, warning that the rapid growth of foreign exchange (FX) trading platforms in Nigeria poses new challenges to the country’s financial stability.

The IMF also noted that Nigerian authorities took significant steps at the end of February to address issues surrounding cryptocurrency trading platforms.

The report read: “Staff recommends that global crypto trading platforms be registered or licensed in Nigeria and subject to the same regulatory requirements applicable to financial intermediaries following the principle of same activity, same risk, and same regulation.”

The IMF also urged Nigerian authorities to strengthen anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) preventive controls on crypto trading platforms.

It emphasized the need for effective risk-based supervision of these platforms and other virtual asset service providers.

During discussions with the IMF team, the Nigerian authorities noted the need to stabilize the FX market through critical reforms.

Acknowledging mounting pressure on the exchange rate due to illicit flows via crypto platforms, the authorities highlighted the significance of maintaining external stability.

They pointed out that recent reforms and efforts to attract FX liquidity, including a mandate requiring international oil companies to hold 50% of repatriated oil receipts in Nigeria for 90 days, were designed to achieve this goal.

The Nigerian government admitted that illicit flows through cryptocurrency platforms are exerting undue pressure on the exchange rate.

Consequently, the authorities have moved to implement stricter controls on crypto platforms and reinforce compliance with existing FX regulations.

The report read:

“The authorities agreed with the importance of maintaining external stability and emphasized that the reforms which they have implemented as well as efforts to bring in FX liquidity—including the requirement for international oil companies to hold 50 percent of repatriated oil receipts in Nigeria for 90 days—are geared towards that end. They see pressure on the exchange rate now coming from illicit flows, including through crypto asset platforms, and not being driven by fundamentals, noting that some ceilings on FX access are intended to curb abuse.”

For instance, South Africa was reported to lead the way in cryptocurrency regulation by licensing approximately 60 digital-asset platforms, positioning itself as one of the first nations on the continent to mandate permits for crypto exchanges.

With Nigeria accounting for about 66.8% of the Africa’s cryptocurrency interest, the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) classified cryptocurrency trading as a national security issue.

Also, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directed four fintech startups operating in the country—Opay, MoniepointPaga, and Palmpay—to block the accounts of customers engaging in cryptocurrency transactions and to report those transactions to law enforcement agencies. [The fintech companies have now been allowed to resume new customer onboarding].

More so, around February this year, crypto trading platform, Binance, had to disable its peer-to-peer feature for Nigerian users as it came under the searchlight of the Nigerian government over allegations of currency manipulation and money laundering.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), during a virtual meeting with the Blockchain Industry Coordinating Committee of Nigeria (BICCoN), called for a new cryptocurrency measure that aims to remove the naira a currency pair from cryptocurrency peer-to-peer platforms.

Commenting on this development, particularly by the recommendations by The IMF, Ray Youssef, the NoOnes’ CEO, said:

“The strategy adopted by Western institutions, particularly in Africa’s largest economy, could inhibit Nigerian fintech innovation. This approach mirrors regulatory frameworks like New York’s Bit License, which prompted a significant departure of talent and capital from both New York and the broader United States. Such policies could undermine the vibrancy of Nigeria’s sector, notably in the thriving P2P crypto markets that have introduced substantial liquidity.

There’s a possibility of facing restrictive measures similar to those associated with Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), which have been widely resisted in Nigeria due to a preference for decentralized alternatives like P2P Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. It is crucial for the continued evolution of P2P platforms, as they are key to unleashing the potential of Pan-African Trade.”

NoOnes is a fast-growing African crypto marketplace with over 400,000 users across its largest markets, including Nigeria, Cameroon, Ghana, India, and the Philippines.

Despite launching just last year, NoOnes has seen impressive growth with over 200,000 app downloads and Ray brings over 20 years of experience in building peer-to-peer focused businesses.

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Ray Youssef Reacts to CBN’s Crypto Exchange Restrictions, says Africa Most Over Regulated Region https://techeconomy.ng/ray-youssef-reacts-to-cbns-crypto-exchange-restrictions-says-africa-most-over-regulated-region/ https://techeconomy.ng/ray-youssef-reacts-to-cbns-crypto-exchange-restrictions-says-africa-most-over-regulated-region/#respond Wed, 28 Feb 2024 15:45:53 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=126175 Ray Youssef, CEO of NoOnes shares a different perspective regarding the recent moves by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) led by Dr. Yemi Cardoso, especially the sweeping decision to restrict cryptocurrency exchanges from transacting in the country.

The Nigerian government had through the apex bank recently blocked the online platforms of Binance, OctaFX, Coinbase and others to avert what it considers continuous manipulation of the forex market and illicit movement of funds.

Meanwhile, the CBN had in December 2023 reviewed its position on the ban on cryptocurrency transactions in Nigeria.

This was contained in a circular dated December 22, 2023, with reference number FPR/DIR/PUB/CIR/002/003, and signed by Haruna Mustafa, the Director, Financial Policy and Regulation Department, in which the apex bank stated that “current trends globally showed the need for crypto regulation”.

Then, CBN said it had changed its stance on crypto assets in the country and asked banks to disregard its earlier ban on crypto transactions.

But, yesterday, Dr. Cardoso, Nigeria’s Central Bank Governor, justifying the crypto exchange restrictions, stated that about $26 billion passed through Binance Nigeria in the last one year.

He dropped this hint in response to the questions on the activities of cryptocurrency platforms like Binance, especially how the apex bank thought about balancing currency manipulation and not stifling innovation.

Cardoso argued that the cryto exchange restrictions were based on the fact the CBN has a responsibility to protect Nigerians (and investment community).

However, a crypto expert, Ray Youssef, the CEO of NoOnes, the financial communication super app connecting people of the Global South to the world’s financial systems, has argued that the CBN should take a fearless bet on the potential of the Nigerian youth and total potential energy of the economy would inspire Africa and the world.

His comment reads:

“Africa is the most over regulated region in the world and this is directly relational to poverty and stagnation, especially when governments do it with an unsteady frantic footing.

“No nation has ever escaped this inflationary death spiral and like quicksand the more frantic the moves the faster you sink.

“There is still a chance for Nigeria to escape and set a precedent for all others to follow.

“A fearless bet on the potential of their youth and total potential energy of their economy would inspire Africa and the world. The Nigerian people have rejected CDBC’s and embraced Bitcoin as a medium of exchange and lead the world in adoption, putting all your bets on black is the winning bet. We at NoOnes invite the government to an official dialogue.

“We advocate for the youth and a Pan African Renaissance starting with fixing the money problem first.

“There is a win win win here, the only losers will be those who want the entirety of Africa suppressed. This is our time and this time it shall be different!”

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Ex-Paxful chief Ray Youssef Joins NoOnes as CEO https://techeconomy.ng/ex-paxful-chief-ray-youssef-joins-noones-as-ceo/ https://techeconomy.ng/ex-paxful-chief-ray-youssef-joins-noones-as-ceo/#respond Mon, 04 Dec 2023 08:48:44 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=119732 NoOnes, the financial communication super app connecting people of the Global South to the world’s financial systems, has appointed Ray Youssef as CEO.

The launch follows the announcement NoOnes’ official launch as Youssef is expected to champion the startup’s audacious mission to achieve a billion daily active users of Bitcoin within the next seven years.

NoOnes appoints Ray Youssef
Ray Youssef and the NoOnes team

Founded in 2023, NoOnes was developed to empower the financial freedom of the Global South.

The platform enables users to move money freely and faster, without the friction and bottlenecks associated with legacy banking and financial institutions.

Its business ideology hinges on the belief that peer-to-peer is the world’s only true free market and that Bitcoin is the new global financial architecture poised to uplift the people of Africa, Latin America and South East Asia.

NoOnes’ biggest markets to date are Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, India and Philippines, accruing over 400,000 users worldwide to date, and achieving profitability within just under 4 months of operations.

The NoOnes app, available on Google Store, comprises three main components:

  • A marketplace where users from 190 countries can buy or sell Bitcoin and stable coins with over 400 payment methods available (including gift cards, mobile money, bank transfers and other crypto currencies.) 
  • A wallet which acts as a store of value 
  • A messenger where the majority of peer-to-peer trades take place 

In addition to its wide spectrum of product features, which also includes an upcoming advanced wallet functionality that enables bill payment processing with top African vendors, NoOnes is also dedicated to optimising the user experience, particularly for customers of the Global South.

This focus involves removing constraints and enhancing accessibility through a simplified and seamless KYC onboarding process and the provision of a safe trading environment with a fast and effective localised dispute process.

Ray Youssef’s addition to the organisation brings with it a wealth of experience and insights across areas such as strategic planning, product innovation, growth hacking and operations management. As a seasoned entrepreneur, he brings years of insights to the organisation, having navigated the challenges of the startup landscape.

Prior to joining NoOnes, Youssef had served as the CEO of Paxful, USA, INC. a company he founded and led to unprecedented heights.

Youssef is also one of the brains behind Built with Bitcoin, a foundation that aims to build 100 communities across Africa, helping to improve the physical, mental, environmental and financial health of the underserved.

Speaking on his new role as CEO of Noones, Ray Youssef, stated;

‘It’s an honour to assume this position and get straight to work. For the past 8 years, I have fought for financial sovereignty for the Global South. Finally, I am glad to be able to fulfil the mission I began almost a decade ago. I’m confident that Bitcoin will play a crucial role in promoting the prosperity of our continent, and I’m thrilled and privileged to contribute to the company’s ambition and growth. Our first major goal will be to create an interoperable Pan-African clearing layer taking intra African trade from the single digits, to levels comparable to intra-European trade. Africa alone has the potential to make NoOnes a trillion dollar company but when you factor in the rest of the global south the sky’s the limit.”

As a co-author of the CivKit whitepaper – a decentralised open-source protocol for Civilization 2.0 – Youssef emphasises his commitment to financial inclusion.

He envisions Bitcoin playing a pivotal role in eradicating poverty and giving the Global South a rightful seat in the global financial conversation, fostering more trades and more wealth. NoOnes will be the first company to build on CivKit sharing its liquidity and welcoming new competitors to build a global free market together.

Youssef concluded, “The internet, mobile phones, and a wave of disruptive startups failed to truly disrupt money. At NoOnes, we believe that finishing Bitcoin is the way. New financial tools are creating unprecedented, borderless opportunities and these tools empower and will continue to empower the people in ways never seen before.”

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